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Opening Credits
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About book and author
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Synopsis
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Chapter 1-Before constructing a metaphysical framework, philosophers must ascertain the origin and nature of human brains' mental components
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Chapter 2-Philosophers must perform a criticism of pure reason to avoid the risk of metaphysical dogmatism
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Chapter 3-By failing to prevent dogmatism, philosophy fosters the growth of skepticism.
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Chapter 4-Both religion and science are predicated on metaphysical notions, which makes skepticism a threat to both.
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Chapter 5-If the reason is incapable of providing us with a priori knowledge, it is also incapable of securing our understanding of mathematics.
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Chapter 6-A priori knowledge is not inherent knowledge; it is information generated by the mind's mechanics.
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Chapter 7-The mind is composed of three significant faculties: sensation, comprehension, and reason
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Chapter 8-The mind requires established methods of organizing sense data to transform it into meaningful information.
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Chapter 9-Time and space are pure types of sensitivity that serve as templates for the mind's organization of sense data.
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Chapter 10-Additionally, our minds include blueprints for comprehending and thinking about the universe.
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Chapter 11-The mind may learn a priori information and concepts through the usage of its templates.
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Chapter 12-As far as we know, conceptual categories simply represent our perception of reality, not reality itself.
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Chapter 13-We have no knowledge of reality in and of itself - not even whether it exists in space and time.
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Chapter 14-The reason should refrain from philosophical speculation about the nature of reality.
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Final summary
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Ending Credits
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